A beautiful blond undresses and steps
into the shower, only to be attacked a few moments later by a man in
woman's clothing, who stabs her to death...

Lost teenagers stumble onto a terrifying
family of cannibals who dress in human skin and create furniture and
ornaments from human bone and flesh...

A vicious serial killer kidnaps and
slaughters young girls so that he can create a suit from human skin and
thus, transform himself into a woman...

Sound familiar? Of course it does. These are portions of
the plots from three chilling films called PSYCHO, THE
TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE and THE SILENCE OF THE
LAMBS. They are three films after which you can leave the darkened
theater and tell yourself "thank god, it's only a movie". Or can you? Because,
you see, elements of each of these blood-curdling films actually occurred. In
real life though, the killer's name was not Norman Bates, Leatherface or Jame
Gumb -- but Edward Gein.

Ed Gein grew up on a farm a few miles outside of the town
of Plainfield, Wisconsin. His father, George, was a hard-luck farmer with
little talent for working the soil and with a taste for alcohol. He also had a
tendency to be quick with his fists after he had been drinking, but as rough
as he was, he was no match for his wife, Augusta.

Augusta had been raised in a fiercely religious home and
with this sort of influence, developed into a raving opponent of anything
related to sex. All around her, she saw nothing but filth and depravity and
how she managed to become pregnant with her two sons, Eddie and Henry, remains
a mystery. Shortly after Ed's birth, she forced her husband to leave the
"sinkhole of filth" called LaCrosse and moved to what she believed to be a
more righteous location, Plainfield. However, this small, God-fearing town
turned out to be no better, at least in Augusta's eyes. She considered the
place to be a "hellhole" and kept her two sons on the farm and away from
anything she considered dangerous or of a sinful influence, namely whorish
women and the wickedness of carnal love.

In 1940, George Gein dropped dead from a heart attack. Most
likely, he was not sorry to go. The years spent with Augusta had undoubtedly
taken their toll on him. The two boys were left alone with their mother and
soon Ed was even deeper under her terrible spell. Henry however, attempted to
break away and have a normal life, but his brother would have nothing to do
with it. Henry's rebelliousness would have a price though. In 1944, he was
found dead on the Gein property. It was reported that he had suffered a heart
attack while trying to put out a brush fire, though this did not explain the
bruises discovered on the back of his head.

Ed finally had his mother all to
himself, although a year later, Augusta had a stroke and was confined to
her bed. Ed tended to her day and night, although even his constant
attentions were found lacking. She screamed and cajoled him at all hours,
calling him a weakling and a failure. He would never be able to survive
without her, she constantly railed at him. Then at other times, Augusta
would call him to her side and allow Eddie to crawl into bed with her. She
would whisper and speak softly to him and allow him to stay beside her
throughout the night. Ed prayed that his mother would not die, would never
leave him to face the world alone.

The Gein farmhouse
near Plainfield (Wide World)

Augusta died in December 1945 after suffering another, more
serious stroke. Ed Gein, now 39 years old, was left alone to fend for himself.
It was at this point that he began his descent into dark and unfathomable
madness. For some time, no one seemed to notice. Even in a town as small as
Plainfield, Ed Gein was a loner and rarely ventured off the farm. Hidden
behind the ramshackle walls of his old farm house, he only appeared in town
when he needed to run an errand, perform some handyman chores or stop for an
occasional beer at Mary Hogan's tavern. No one seemed to think that he was any
stranger than before -- he had always been an odd little man, in need of a
bath, but he seemed no different than he had before his mother's death.

Looking back, Ed's oddities stood out in hindsight. Local
folks would later recall his barroom discussions of articles that he had read
in the pulpy men's magazines, stories of Nazi atrocities, island headhunters
and sex-change operations. His jokes seemed to be a little on the cruel side
as well. When Mary Hogan, the oversized tavern owner, suddenly disappeared, Ed
began kidding that she was staying overnight at his house. Mary had vanished
from the roadhouse, leaving nothing but a puddle of blood behind, and many
thought Gein's jokes about the poor woman were tasteless. Even the stories
about the strange things going on at Ed's house didn't faze anyone. Some local
kids, peeking in Gein's windows, spread rumors that they had seen shrunken
human heads in his living room. Ed laughed and explained that his cousin had
served in the South Seas during World War II and had sent the heads to Ed as
souvenirs.

Old Ed Gein would never hurt anybody, it was thought. He
was a strange little guy who didn't even like the sight of blood. He wouldn't
even go deer hunting with the other fellows in town. That's what everyone in
Plainfield said -- until Bernice Worden disappeared.

She vanished on November 16, 1957. Late that afternoon,
Frank Worden returned to town from an empty day of deer hunting and stopped by
the hardware store that was owned and operated by his mother, Bernice, a 58
year-old widow. Strangely, his mother was not there. She had left, leaving the
door unlocked and the back door open. Frank then discovered something
terrifying -- a trail of blood leading from the storefront to the back door. A
quick search revealed a receipt that had been left behind. The receipt was for
a half-gallon of antifreeze. It had been made out to Ed Gein.

Frank notified the police and they went to Gein's farm
house to question him about Mrs. Worden's whereabouts. When they arrived, they
came upon the body of Bernice in the summer kitchen behind the house. She was
naked, hanging by her heels from an overhead pulley. She had been beheaded and
disemboweled -- and dressed out like a butchered deer.

The stunned and sickened officers immediately called for
reinforcements. A short time later, more than a dozen lawmen were combing the
farm and exploring the contents of what would become known as Ed Gein's "house
of horrors". What they found that night was like nothing that had ever been
recorded in the annals of American crime.

Soup bowls had been made from the sawed-off tops of human
skulls. Chairs had been upholstered in human skin. Lamp shades had been
fashioned from flesh, giving off an eerie and putrid glow. A box was
discovered that contained nothing but human noses. A belt had been made from
female nipples. A shade pull had been decorated with a pair of woman's lips. A
shoe box under a bed contained a collection of dried, female genitalia. The
faces of nine women, carefully stuffed and mounted, were hanging on one
wall.... and there was much more, including a bracelet of skin, a drum made
from a coffee can and human flesh, and more. A shirt of human skin, complete
with breasts, had been fashioned from the tanned torso of a middle-aged woman.
Gein would later confess that he often put the shirt on at night and pretended
to be his mother.

To make matters worse, the refrigerator turned out to be
stocked with frozen human organs and a human heart was found in a pan on the
stove. The local sheriff estimated that the various body parts added up to 15
women, maybe more. Around 4:30 in the morning, after hours of sifting through
the hideous and horrifying debris, the investigators discovered a bloody
burlap sack. Inside of it was a freshly severed head. Inserted into the ears
were large nails connected with twine. The head belonged to Bernice Worden.
Gein had planned to hang it on the wall as a decoration.

During the many hours of confession that followed, Gein
admitted to the murders of two women, Bernice Worden and the tavern owner,
Mary Hogan (although his confession to the Hogan murder would not come until
later). The rest of the gruesome remains in the house had been scavenged from
the local cemetery. For the past 12 years, following the death of his mother,
Gein had been stealing into the Plainfield cemetery at night and robbing
graves. His macabre collection had been gathered from the bodies of the dead.
In his quest, Gein had enlisted the aid of a dim-witted farmer named Gus, who
had helped him to dig up the bodies. Once back at the house though, the work
had all been Ed's. When Gus had been committed to an old-age home, Gein became
desperate for fresh trophies. At this point, he was driven to murder.

For months after Ed was taken away, neighbor boys threw
rocks at his abandoned farm house. To many, the building was seen as a symbol
of evil and depravity. The place was avoided at all costs. Eventually, notice
was posted that the contents of the house and the farm itself would be
auctioned off. The towns people were in an uproar, but little could be done
about it -- or so it seemed. On the night of March 20, 1958, Gein's home was
mysteriously set on fire and it burned to the ground. Arson was suspected but
no matter how it had burned, the people of Plainfield were delighted to see it
gone. When Gein, who was incarcerated at the Central State Hospital, learned
of the loss, he only uttered three words in response. "Just as well," he said.

Some would insist that even greater horrors may have
vanished in the fire, along with the house.

The destruction of the home assured many Plainfield
residents that their town would not become a showplace for the madness of Ed
Gein. However, it did not stop the procession of cars or the curiosity seekers
who came to witness the auction of the remaining property. Much of the rusting
machinery was purchased by scrap dealers and the land itself was sold to a Sun
Prairie real estate developer named Emden Schey. Within months, he would raze
the charred remains of the building and re-forest the property with more than
60,000 trees.

The only oddity from the sale came with the auction for Ed
Gein's car, which he had been driving on the day of Bernice Worden's murder.
This item started a bidding war with 14 different people competing. In the
end, the 1949 Ford sedan sold for the amazing sum of $760. The buyer was a
mysterious bidder identified variously as "Koch Brothers", "Cook Brothers" and
even "Kook Brothers" from Rothschild, Wisconsin. The buyer later turned out to
be an enterprising carnival sideshow operator named Bunny Gibbons from
Rockford, Illinois. The "Ed Gein Ghoul Car" made its first appearance in July
1958 at the Outgamie County Fair in Seymour, Wisconsin. It was displayed in a
canvas tent with huge sign on it, painted to say:

SEE THE CAR THAT HAULED THE DEAD FROM THEIR GRAVES!
ED GEIN'S CRIME CAR! $1,000 REWARD IF IT'S NOT TRUE!

More than 2,000 people paid a 25 cent admission to see the
car over a two-day period.

Word spread of the macabre attraction and controversy
erupted. Plainfield residents, along with officials for the Wisconsin
Association for Mental Health were outraged. Gibbons however, most likely
thrilled with the free publicity, was unfazed by the uproar. Soon though, his
display began to run into trouble. At the Washington County Fair in Slinger,
Wisconsin, the death car had been on display only a few hours before the
sheriff arrived and closed Gibbons down. Soon, county fairs all across the
state banned the attraction and Gibbons headed south to Illinois, where he
hoped to find more open-minded (and perhaps ghoulish) crowds. Whatever became
of the car is unknown.

This was not the last that anyone had heard of Ed Gein.
Back in 2002, I was contacted by a man named John Fischer, who had worked for
the Wisconsin State Crime Lab in 1959-1960. John was a graduating senior at
the University of Wisconsin and worked at the lab for a year under Dexter
Haney, the photo lab chief. John first met Ed Gein in 1960 when he went to
work at the lab one day and recognized several sheriff's deputies from
Waushara County standing around a short man that he didn't know. John inquired
of Charlie Wilson, the lab director, as to who the man was and he told him
that the short man was Ed Gein. He had been brought into the lab and hooked up
to the polygraph machine to try and get him to confess to Mary Hogan's murder.
Her heirs wanted to settle her estate and couldn't as long as she was still
listed as a "missing person".

John told Wilson that when he had come in, Gein had looked
at him and had winked. Charlie knew that he was soon leaving the lab for a
position in Washington D.C. and joked, "I think he likes you. Do you think
Washington is far enough away?"

John went on to tell me that the "trophies" that had been
removed from the house in Plainfield were stored at the Crime Lab in a closed
room under a stairwell. There were of too bizarre a nature, John explained, to
keep in the regular evidence enclosure. "I finally got used to the idea that
heads and other body parts were on the other side of my photo darkroom," he
told me, "even when the room was bathed in red or amber safelights."

In June 1960, the Lab got clearance to dispose of the
evidence and remains. The Lab wanted to incinerate all of it but the word came
down that since some of the remains were Catholic, they could not be burned.
Instead, a wooden box was constructed and the remains received a common burial
-- closing a chapter in the horrific Ed Gein case forever.

By the time Ed Gein died in 1984, he had become a legend
even though he spent the rest of his days locked in an institution. He died on
July 26, 1984 and his body was taken to Plainfield and buried in the local
cemetery. As far as Ed Gein was concerned, he was probably right back where he
belonged.

But his story did not end there, for Ed Gein lives on still
. Even during his lifetime, Gein had become a creature of nightmarish myth,
thanks to local legends, stories and his Central Wisconsin reputation as the
"Mad Butcher of Plainfield". This dark creature of children's imaginations was
immortalized first in 1960 by director Alfred Hitchcock in his film, PSYCHO. However, the film had been inspired by a
book of the same name by Wisconsin author Robert Bloch, who had fashioned the
"bare bones" of the story from the Ed Gein case.

Gein returned (in a fashion) to the big screen again in
1974 with a low-budget cult film called DERANGED.
The story is the effective and chilling look into the private world of a
maniac. Gein is disguised here as a killer named Ezra Cobb who keeps his
mother's mummified body when she dies, brings home other bodies to keep her
company and then turns to murder when he feels the urge to make suits of skin.

That same year (1974), Gein's influence was felt again in
the THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE, directed by Tobe
Hooper, who had been exposed to the real-life case by Wisconsin relatives when
he was a boy. This disturbing film is considered a horror classic and portrays
an entire family of lunatics and cannibals who delight in wearing human skin
and creating bizarre adornments from the bodies of their victims.

Gein's story lived on in 1991 with the release of the
Academy Award winning film THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS.
Based on the book by Thomas Harris, the story featured a serial killer called
"Buffalo Bill," so-named because he skinned his victims. He was attempting to
make a suit of human skin and turn himself into a woman.

The Ed Gein story has also inspired documentary films,
plays and even a comic book. The case was unlike anything else in the history
of America, and some would say that it began a new era -- creating a thirst
for death, depravity and a voyeuristic fascination with the actions of the
killers among us. Who can say? Regardless, the "strange little man" from
Plainfield, Wisconsin has never been forgotten and its sure that his presence
will continue to be felt for many, many years to come.